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- Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941- (29)
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59 results
- NATO wide open. The Soviets would not permit Germany to become nuclear. The President: I had hoped we could have acted on the Nonproliferation Treaty prior to the Phantoms. Both Mansfield and Dirksen think a special session would cause problems. ~:::t
- disconcerting to him. The President: They would impeach me. Nick Katzenbach: Senator Mansfield thinks Sihanouk is the greatest leader in the Far East. The President: Have they ordered fire stopped against DMZ. General Wheeler: Pattern of attacks
- . It will be at the level of the special delegation -- not foreign ministers. The President: We need the dates of exchanges with the Soviets including Glassboro. Begin with the January 64 letter on the day of the Howard University speech. I will talk to Mansfield
- aECREl' fflENSITIVE 3 * ....,. * Senator Mansfield: The North Vietnamese attack has opened many eyes . We are not now in a penny ante game. It appears that the local populous in South Vietnam is not behind us, else the Viet Cong could not have
- to have all his service people exposed as much as possible in the movies, etc. to the bond drive. The President said "we must finance this war. 11 The President later asked if Mansfield will be back with his U. N. plan and does Goldberg know it won 1 t
- the bombing. They were telling the same thing to Fulbright, Clark, Mansfield, Church and some others. McBundy had lunch with Dobrynin, and he became an ardent advocate for a pause. Then McNamara came to Texas and said it would be a good idea. Rusk was a hold
- with Senators Fulbright and Mansfield and others .. The President said that the Ways and Means Committee shelved the tax message today. The President said he did not want any of the information which he was about to discuss to go outside of the room
- to prove we provoked the incident. Senator McCarthy was .nasty personally. Senator Cooper was decent. Senator ·Mundt did not find the opening he wanted. Sparkman was marginally helpful. So was Senator Mansfield and Senator Hickenhooper on one occasion
Folder, "October 14, 1968 Meeting with Foreign Policy Advisory Group," Papers of Tom Johnson, Box 4
(Item)
- with Hanoi, go to candidates and key leaders. 1. 6. Mansfield, 2. Dirksen, 3. Russell, 4. Speaker. Albert, 5. Ford The President: How many in State know. Secretary Rusk: Four. Secretary Clifford: The major equation is elementary. Taking Hanoi at its word
- MEETING WITH THE TUESDAY LUNCH GROUP, OCTOBER 15, 1968 THOSE ATTENDING THE MEETING WERE: The President Secretary Clifford Secretary Rusk Genera 1 Wheeler CIA Director Richard Helms Walt Rostow GeorgeChristian Tom Johnson The President: Senator Mansfield
- F~lbript. b\IC we doD1 t wam to do it too lOD& elae •• lo•• o•r baa• of aapport. [manuscript notes say Fulbright, not Mansfield] fh~ PR.ESl.OENl' We will .o rue•c:iay to aAtUfy yog he.re 'ODiabt. i~ Monaay night myself. However, if yoa have
- . The President said Senator Aiken let go, had not checked his facts, but later told Senator Mansfield that he had not issued a statement but merely talked to a radio newsman .'. If this can happen with Senator Aiken, it can happen in Vietnam, the President
- Douglass Cater Bromley Smith Larry 01Brien Chester Cooper Congreaaional Leaders : S enator Dirksen S enator Mansfield Speaker McCorma.ck Representative Gerald F ord SERVlet: ~El
- ratio by even a few p~rcent it will have been wo::-th the effort. -,/ j r r j.· r . rr I !. f r Secretary Rusk addressed himself b riefly to the Goldberg-Mansfield Resolution f on bringing the Vietnam issue t'o _the United Nations. He pointed
Folder, "Meetings With the President -- 6 January 1964 - 1 April 1964," McCone Memoranda, Box 1
(Item)
- that he thought our South Vietnam policy wae completely wrong. That we should u1e SEATO to handle the prolJlem. Di~ksen quEiu•tioned the vlabUity of SEA TO. Mansfield supported the McNamara position. SANITIZED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ/£AC, 0\-1'1